Ditching EVs For Hybrids Is Already Paying Off For Automakers
Good morning! It’s Thursday, September 5, 2024, and this is The Morning Shift, your daily roundup of the top automotive headlines from around the …
"There is only one answer to the threat we face as a nation. The answer is solidarity."That is the core message directed at the American working …
Common Dreams flipped this story into Latest News•29d
Good morning! It’s Thursday, September 5, 2024, and this is The Morning Shift, your daily roundup of the top automotive headlines from around the …
Battery maker agrees to recognize union A majority of workers at Ultium Cells battery manufacturing plant in Spring Hill signed cards to join the …
Nicholas Petris, born to Greek immigrants in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1923, could remember a time when electric trucks were a common sight on …
Elon Musk's endorsement of former President Donald Trump was meant to buoy the candidate's chances in November. But more than a month after Musk …
To rake or not to rake? Here’s why you might want to leave your leaves on the ground this fall.
Typhoon Yagi passed south of Hong Kong, bringing heavy rain, strong winds and widespread disruptions.
The Fed has signaled that an interest rate cut could come as soon as this month. Here's what that means for your money and what you can do before and after it happens.
Grey Goose VP of Marketing, Aleco Azqueta, spills the latest on the brand's viral US Open cocktail
Greenpeace UK protesters blocked access to Unilever’s headquarters in central London on Thursday, 5 September, claiming the company is “trashing the planet and harming communities” through single-use plastics. Activists locked themselves onto barricades made from giant Dove products, one of Unilever’s most well-known brands, with each product’s logo changed to a dead dove. The environmental campaign group is calling on the company to remove single-use plastic from its operations and phase it out fully within a decade, starting with plastic sachets, which they say are “near impossible to collect and recycle”.